Madison — Gov. Scott Walker on Tuesday embraced a move to ban abortion after 20 weeks after repeatedly declining to spell out where he stood on the issue in last year's re-election campaign.

It is the latest example of Walker downplaying a major issue until after being re-elected and climbing to the top tier of likely 2016 presidential candidates. Walker did not campaign on plans to spin off the University of Wisconsin System as a public authority and now says he will sign so-called right-to-work legislation even though he insisted for years he would keep the measure from reaching his desk.

Wisconsin Right to Life has touted as its top priority legislation that has yet to be introduced that would prevent women from seeking abortions in most cases after 20 weeks. (62)

If Park Bank is liable for not spotting Sujata "Sue" Sachdeva's $34 million embezzlement from Koss Corp. and has to reimburse the company, Koss Chief Executive Michael Koss should also be ordered to personally pay the public company he runs, the bank argues in a new lawsuit.

Grant Thornton, Koss Corp.'s former auditor, should also have to pay a portion of any award that may be ordered, Park Bank argued in the latest twist in a long-running court fight stemming from Sachdeva's massive embezzlement.

"Park Bank denies any and all liability to Koss in this case," the bank said in its action. "Nevertheless, should Park Bank be found liable to Koss (Corp.) and required to pay damages to Koss, in this case, those damages will have been the result of a common liability of Park Bank, Michael Koss and Grant Thornton, thereby entitling Park Bank to (a) contribution from Michael Koss and Grant Thornton."(9)

Siragusa doesn't remember his time under Infante with fondness

In his new book, "Goose: The Outrageous Life & Times of a Football Guy," Tony Siragusa recalls with affection his coach in Indianapolis (and later Baltimore), Ted Marchibroda.

But Siragusa has no fond memories of Lindy Infante, the former Packers head coach, who succeeded Marchibroda as head coach of the Colts in 1996. Infante had been the team’s offensive coordinator in 1995.

"Infante was a guy who only cared about whether his offense looked good or not," Siragusa says in the book he wrote with Don Yaeger. "The reality is that Infante was just an average offensive coordinator, and none of us really understood why Jim Irsay made him the head coach. . . . Everybody on that team would have died for Marchibroda. He was completely respected by the players."

Siragusa, now a NFL game analyst for Fox, said the Colts’ defense would dominate the offense in practice so much that Infante (left, credit: AP) complained to the defense.

"Infante treated the players with no respect, especially any guy who got hurt," Siragusa says. "If you were injured, you were nothing to Infante. Football players are loyal to a guy until he’s disloyal to them, and Infante was disloyal pretty fast to a lot of guys. He was the kind of guy who thought his coaching was better than our playing. As a coach, you have to respect your players, because those guys are the ones putting food on your table. That’s how it works."

Siragusa, who said he "didn’t have any tolerance for Infante’s crap," refers to him as "a bozo."

"I’d look right at him and say, ‘Your offense sucks, why don’t you work on scoring a couple of points?’ Oh, he hated me."

Siragusa (left) says he missed six games in the ’96 regular season with a knee injury but says he was ready for the playoff game against Pittsburgh. But Infante put Siragusa on the inactive list and he was not to travel with the team to Pittsburgh.

Incensed, Siragusa flew to Pittsburgh and, as scheduled, met with the production team televising the game.

"As I’m leaving, here comes Lindy Infante with the PR director," Siragusa writes. "They go, ‘What the ---- are you doing here?’ I say, ‘I just did the meeting, and I told them every ------- thing, that you didn’t fly me out, that you’re a scumbag, that you’re an idiot.’ Infante flips out because he knows he’s busted now. So then they chase me down and say, ‘We’ve got a penthouse suite for you at the hotel, we’re going to pay for everything. We wanted you here.’ I completely call Infante out. I say, ‘No, you didn’t, and don’t act like you did. I’m going to stay on Pittsburgh’s sideline, even during the game, as a matter of fact. How about that?’ "

Siragusa, who was then a free agent, said Infante called him sometime after the Colts lost, wanting him to re-sign with Indianapolis.

You can imagine what Siragusa told him.

"Great town, great fans, I loved it there, but I wasn’t playing another down for that guy," Siragusa says.

In 1997, the Colts went 3-13 under Infante and he was fired.

Infante finished with an NFL coaching record of 36-60 (24-40 in Green Bay).

About Bob Wolfley

Bob Wolfley retired in October 2014 He wrote the SportsDay blog and column and about TV and radio issues.